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15b6757b 1/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
9715cf42 2// Name: nonenglish.h
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3// Purpose: topic overview
4// Author: wxWidgets team
5// RCS-ID: $Id$
6// Licence: wxWindows license
7/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
8
880efa2a 9/**
36c9828f 10
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11@page overview_nonenglish Writing Non-English Applications
12
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13
14@li @ref overview_nonenglish_locales
15@li @ref overview_nonenglish_strings
16@li @ref overview_nonenglish_fontmapping
17@li @ref overview_nonenglish_converting
18@li @ref overview_nonenglish_help
19
20
21<hr>
22
23
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24This article describes how to write applications that communicate with the user
25in a language other than English. Unfortunately many languages use different
26charsets under Unix and Windows (and other platforms, to make the situation
27even more complicated). These charsets usually differ in so many characters
28that it is impossible to use the same texts under all platforms.
29
30The wxWidgets library provides a mechanism that helps you avoid distributing
31many identical, only differently encoded, packages with your application (e.g.
32help files and menu items in iso8859-13 and windows-1257). Thanks to this
33mechanism you can, for example, distribute only iso8859-13 data and it will be
34handled transparently under all systems.
35
36Please read the @ref overview_i18n which describes the locales concept.
37
38In the following text, wherever @e iso8859-2 and @e windows-1250 are used, any
39encodings are meant and any encodings may be substituted there.
40
41
42@section overview_nonenglish_locales Locales
43
44The best way to ensure correctly displayed texts in a GUI across platforms is
45to use locales. Write your in-code messages in English or without diacritics
46and put real messages into the message catalog (see @ref overview_i18n).
47
48A standard .po file begins with a header like this:
49
50@code
51# SOME DESCRIPTIVE TITLE.
52# Copyright (C) YEAR Free Software Foundation, Inc.
53# FIRST AUTHOR <EMAIL@ADDRESS>, YEAR.
54#
55msgid ""
56msgstr ""
57"Project-Id-Version: PACKAGE VERSION\n"
58"POT-Creation-Date: 1999-02-19 16:03+0100\n"
59"PO-Revision-Date: YEAR-MO-DA HO:MI+ZONE\n"
60"Last-Translator: FULL NAME <EMAIL@ADDRESS>\n"
61"Language-Team: LANGUAGE <LL@li.org>\n"
62"MIME-Version: 1.0\n"
63"Content-Type: text/plain; charset=CHARSET\n"
64"Content-Transfer-Encoding: ENCODING\n"
65@endcode
66
67Note this particular line:
68
69@code
70"Content-Type: text/plain; charset=CHARSET\n"
71@endcode
72
73It specifies the charset used by the catalog. All strings in the catalog are
74encoded using this charset.
75
76You have to fill in proper charset information. Your .po file may look like
77this after doing so:
78
79@code
80# SOME DESCRIPTIVE TITLE.
81# Copyright (C) YEAR Free Software Foundation, Inc.
82# FIRST AUTHOR <EMAIL@ADDRESS>, YEAR.
83#
84msgid ""
85msgstr ""
86"Project-Id-Version: PACKAGE VERSION\n"
87"POT-Creation-Date: 1999-02-19 16:03+0100\n"
88"PO-Revision-Date: YEAR-MO-DA HO:MI+ZONE\n"
89"Last-Translator: FULL NAME <EMAIL@ADDRESS>\n"
90"Language-Team: LANGUAGE <LL@li.org>\n"
91"MIME-Version: 1.0\n"
92"Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso8859-2\n"
93"Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit\n"
94@endcode
95
96(Make sure that the header is @b not marked as @e fuzzy.)
97
98wxWidgets is able to use this catalog under any supported platform
99(although iso8859-2 is a Unix encoding and is normally not understood by
100Windows).
101
102How is this done? When you tell the wxLocale class to load a message catalog
103that contains a correct header, it checks the charset. The catalog is then
104converted to the charset used (see wxLocale::GetSystemEncoding and
105wxLocale::GetSystemEncodingName) by the user's operating system. This is the
106default behaviour of the wxLocale class; you can disable it by @b not passing
107@c wxLOCALE_CONV_ENCODING to wxLocale::Init.
108
109
110@section overview_nonenglish_strings Non-English Strings or 8-bit Characters in Source
111
112By convention, you should only use characters without diacritics (i.e. 7-bit
113ASCII strings) for msgids in the source code and write them in English.
114
115If you port software to wxWindows, you may be confronted with legacy source
116code containing non-English string literals. Instead of translating the strings
117in the source code to English and putting the original strings into message
118catalog, you may configure wxWidgets to use non-English msgids and translate to
119English using message catalogs:
120
121@li If you use the program @c xgettext to extract the strings from the source
122 code, specify the option <tt>--from-code=@<source code charset@></tt>.
123@li Specify the source code language and charset as arguments to
124 wxLocale::AddCatalog. For example:
125 @code
126 locale.AddCatalog(_T("myapp"), wxLANGUAGE_GERMAN, _T("iso-8859-1"));
127 @endcode
128
129
130@section overview_nonenglish_fontmapping Font Mapping
131
132You can use @ref overview_mbconv and wxFontMapper to display text:
133
134@code
135if (!wxFontMapper::Get()->IsEncodingAvailable(enc, facename))
136{
15b6757b 137 wxFontEncoding alternative;
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138 if (wxFontMapper::Get()->GetAltForEncoding(enc, &alternative,
139 facename, false))
15b6757b 140 {
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141 wxCSConv convFrom(wxFontMapper::Get()->GetEncodingName(enc));
142 wxCSConv convTo(wxFontMapper::Get()->GetEncodingName(alternative));
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143 text = wxString(text.mb_str(convFrom), convTo);
144 }
145 else
146 ...failure (or we may try iso8859-1/7bit ASCII)...
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147}
148...display text...
149@endcode
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36c9828f 151
9715cf42 152@section overview_nonenglish_converting Converting Data
36c9828f 153
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154You may want to store all program data (created documents etc.) in the same
155encoding, let's say @c utf-8. You can use wxCSConv to convert data to the
156encoding used by the system your application is running on (see
157wxLocale::GetSystemEncoding).
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9715cf42 160@section overview_nonenglish_help Help Files
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162If you're using wxHtmlHelpController there is no problem at all. You only need
163to make sure that all the HTML files contain the META tag:
36c9828f 164
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165@code
166<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso8859-2">
167@endcode
168
169Also, the hhp project file needs one additional line in the @c OPTIONS section:
170
171@code
172Charset=iso8859-2
173@endcode
174
175This additional entry tells the HTML help controller what encoding is used in
176contents and index tables.
177
178*/
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